With Jumby’s arrival I am once again the parent to a disabled child. In the three years since I’ve been required to tube feed or face a plethora of medical professionals, there has been one aspect of raising a disabled child I hadn’t missed at all.
The stigma that is attached to a disability, to me as a parent of a handicapped child and to my child for being different.
I had forgotten how every time I venture out in public with my child we become the traveling circus, the free freak show for people to pointedly ignore or worse yet cast upon us their stares filled with pity and sorrow.
I didn’t have a choice when Bug was born. Whether I liked it or not, I was initiated into this odd club of parents, where all the members had different stories but one common link. They all had children who the world looked upon as different. They all had to face the looks of sorrow or pity whenever they told the world at large why their child wasn’t “normal.”
I didn’t want to be the parent to a different kid, dammit. I wanted to be the mother of the blonde haired, blue eyed baby boy I saw beneath the mask of his disabilities. I couldn’t understand why the world never saw him the way I did: As a remarkable little human being who was just like the rest of us underneath his broken body and mucked up DNA sequences.
Then I learned the secret most people never have the opportunity to discover. The sheer joy involved in having a disabled child in your life.
This time around the parental merry-go-round, I had a choice. I actively chose to bring home a disabled child of my own. I made a choice to deal with every aspect of parenting a special needs child. I signed myself up for the freak show that follows us wherever we go.
I don’t regret it for one second. Our family, our lives are infinitely better with Jumby in it.
But there is a difference with Jumby that is palpably noticeable. A shift in perception that wasn’t visible to our family when we were blessed with Bug’s life. My children were three years younger and a world less mature while Bug breathed. There were things about living with a disabled brother they never noticed because they were too young to remember life without him before he was born.
But death and puberty and time has swirled around them like the perfect storm and given them a clarity of life they once lacked. They see the difference between their bodies and Jumby’s tight twisted little body. They see how difficult it is for Jumby to get through the day as they run and jump and play and take their own healthy bodies for granted.
Even more so, they are keenly aware of people’s reactions to Jumby and to us when we take him out in public. It goes beyond the brown hair and his doey brown eyes. Beyond his cleft chin and the different noses on their faces. They are bonded with Jumby, united by the love the three of them share for one another and they don’t understand why people can’t see past his wheel chair or the way he holds his head to the side to see better, to see the spirit of the boy they so clearly see.
They have witnessed the social disparity between them and it’s left them cold.
It is a lesson I knew they’d learn but one I wish I could shield them from.
I can’t shield my children from this. Unless I choose to live in a bubble but let’s face it, it’s no fun to flash my boobs if no one is watching.
But I can stand up and tell the world to grow up.
To open their eyes and see past their own feelings and issues and take responsibility for their actions and the words they so carelessly toss around.
I can teach my children and the children around me that it is not cool to use the word ‘retard’ to make fun of someone or hammer a point home.
I can teach my children and the children around me that it is okay to touch a disabled person, they aren’t contagious or filled with cooties. (Unless they are homeless and living under a bridge and even then they just need a good de-lousing.)
But can I teach the world around me? The adults?
I don’t know, but I do know that when I’m on twitter I don’t need to innocently click a link and have this image staring back at me:

Surely there is a better way to prove the point you are trying to make than to disparage a community of already challenged people. And don’t tell me you can because you have disabled children yourself. That doesn’t give you a free pass to be ignorant.
How are you protecting and advocating for your family if you are perpetuating this stereotype?
This isn’t cool people. This is so beyond cool my head hurts.
Nor do I need to open up my email and find this in my inbox:
Seriously. Have you met me? Do you know I gave birth to that child you just made fun of? That I just adopted another who would easily become a caricature in someone else’s life if I gave them the opportunity?
I don’t need to read a joke about how it’s National Retarded Day and guess what? I’m it.
Seriously.
That is my family you are making fun of. It’s my sons, my niece, my father-in-law and my friend’s children.
And with a small twist of fate, it could be yours, the same way it became mine.
I can’t change the world or most people in it. The best I can do is set an example for my children and for those around me and educate them to the value a disabled child or adult can bring to a community and to society in general.
You may not agree with me and that’s cool.
It takes all kinds of people to make this world the wonderfully interesting place it is. But if you are going to disparage a community of people who had the misfortune to have more health or mental problems than you can shake a stick at, you had better be prepared for me to bite back hard.
I owe it to Bug, to Jumby, to that man who shuffles his gait down the street because his feet are badly clubbed.
But mostly, I owe it to myself. There is a difference, a line, between what is funny and what is pathetic and rude. I see the difference every time I look in my son’s eyes and see his smile illuminate brighter than a 100 watt bulb.
What I’m having a hard time with is trying to explain to my children why everyone else can’t see it as well.
Don’t make this harder for us, for me, for Jumby.
Or next time I won’t play so nice.










sam {temptingmama}
God I love you.
Wonderful post Tanis. Truly wonderful. You’re a gifted lady.
Those children are blessed to have you – even if I’d never let you babysit mine.
*snicker*
Shawn
You know this use to hurt me and make me so angry. But now, I know that these people will never experience the joy and the purest love that I have because of my son. Ben is 18 and has Down Syndrome. Now I just smile at these utter fools, becaue they will never get it. I can handle ignorance, I just can’t deal with prejudice. My neices and nephews adore my son and have always shown the world that he is the greatest and people tend to follow suit. Hang in there, I know that Momma Bear wants to kick butt and take names later.
MommyNamedApril
I’m so sorry for you, your family and all the other wonderful families raising special children that there are so many ignorant assholes in this world.
SciFi Dad
You’re kidding, right? Someone didn’t actually send those images to your inbox, did they?
Fuck, you’ve got to be kidding.
Gladys
Thank you for this post. I am not the mother of nor am I the aunt, niece or relative of a disabled or challenged child. That said I do want to say my heart goes out to those of you who are.
I do have a question and pleas do not take this as me being a bitch. Why when I bend down to say hello to your child do your snort and turn the wheel chair away? Why when I ask your DS adult son how he liked the animated movie we all just exited do you grab his hand and march off with him still trying to answer me?
I am not asking your child because they are disabled or “special” I’m asking them because I am an outgoing grandmother who looks at all children as special. I understand you being protective. I understand you being guarded but honestly I looked you in the eye and smiled and in most cases asked YOU if I could speak with your child. Should I not speak to them? Should I ignore them and act as if they don’t exist?
Please tell me how I should act, because honestly watch me in the popcorn line. I’m the lady asking the little girl in the tutu and the tiara where she got it because I want one just like it. I’m the one telling the little boy in the superman pajamas and hulk slippers that I think the Hulk could ‘take’ Superman.
Charles
Not sure who is more fortunate: your “DNA” children or Jumby. Close cqll.
Your posting brought back memories of my daughter. She was a Trisomy D. Full blown case. Classical case. Textbook. In fact her x-rays were published in a radiology textbook.
At her funeral many well meaning people asked about the “viewing”. They expected us to have closed casket. Jennifer was our loved daughter. We were proud of her and the love we felt for her. What I did not expect was the thrill seekers who wanted to see and the people who were shocked we would “display” her defects.
Thank you for reminding us all of the value of all life.
Tory
Great post. Lucky Jumby. Congratulations on being the mother of four great kids.
SoMo
Okay, I have a question and I am serious. I am always stumped when my kids (6 and 3 yrs old) ask about a person in a wheelchair or challenged in some way. I usually tell them not to stare and they are people like us, but what about all the questions? What happen to them? Why are they like that? Etc. Most times I don’t know the exact medical condition people have so I just sit there stumbling. I don’t want my kids to be scared or stand offish of diabled people, but how do you explain it to kids?
I hope none of this offended anyone because it was not meant to. I just have always wondered what to say to my kids.
prcrstn8
People suck. My dad the bigot used to say “people are shit,” pretty much the same thing, no? Years later I still try to deny what he said and hate to admit he was right.
Omnibus Driverht
I will tell you that I belonged to a club that put on the biggest cat show in the Chicagoland area. My favorite of all of our regular attendees is a guy with cerebral palsy. Nothing made me happier than plopping my kitty into his lap in his custom built wheel chair.
The squeals and chortles and whistles kept me happy through good times and bad. And knowing that my kitties brought such pleasure was a visceral thing.
I learned to look for the least and best level of communication, instead of the “highest.” High is only so high as you’re willing to lift your eyes.
Thank God Jumby found YOU.
Kim
I was 13 when my disabled sister was born, I am now 40. My sister is now almost 27. My parents never talked about her disability, we never discussed the reaction of people when we went out and my mom just shut down anytime I had a question. To be fair, I think my parents did what they could, it was how they coped. My sister has Neurofibromatosis, she is blind and has the mentality of a 7 year old. My girls are 10 and 12, I’ve tried to answer their questions, let them know that their aunt is no less valuable than any other person and expected that they treat her with the respect shown anyone else. Consequently, they are amazingly empathetic girls. I think talking to our children is the start and I am positive we will dispatch into the world a much for generous generation.
I cannot believe that someone would be so insensitive to send you such garbage. I would not have been so nice.
wordnerd
Well done.
Very well done.
Stephanie
I get all teary-eyed every time I read the words “my son” in reference to Jumby. I know that’s not the main point of this post, but jeez, I just can’t get over how I’m SO frickin’ HAPPY for you!
And, um, thanks for the heartfelt and intelligent words, wise redneck lady.
Gnome
As a walking freak show (I have dwarfism) I want to thank you for posting this. I can only hope it may enlighten a few people.
The people who stare at me at the store, the people who cut in front of me in line thinking I am insignificant, the people who ignore their children as they make fun of me and point and laugh when I enter my daughters school for a band concert, to the people who think I don’t have feelings.
Thank you!
Jodie
Jill
I can see how it would hard to not get stabby while writing this post, but you made your point very well, Tanis. I will admit that I’m guilty of using that word as an insult or as a joke, but since I became a mother and I have such a direct impact on forming another human being, I have tried to be more conscious of what I say and how I say it. I am appalled that people would send you images like that though, and I hope they got the message!!!
Andrew
My fiance works for a place called A Very Special Place, which is sort of a community center for people with developmental disabilities. Every evening she comes home and tells me stories of her job, and I cannot help but admire her heart. But what turns me cold is the people who she works with- the caliber of people who are left to take care of society’s unfortunates. These are not people I would want near my children. She loves working with the consumers, and they all adore her. She tells me about parents who use AVSP as a day care center- which it emphatically is NOT. And she tells me the horror stories about parents who, from the sound of it, almost hate their own children. And I admit, reading this post almost made me want to cry, seeing that at least one person out there doesn’t hate their own child because he’s different. Is that odd? Perhaps. I know that they also tend to be pretty poor parents- with their children (who are a range of ages through fully grown adults) having health problems because the parents never, ever discipline or restrict them. But just because a kid is mentally disabled doesn’t mean you can’t take the candy away from them sometimes so they stop being, literally, over 400 lbs…right?
M
I usually lurk but am coming out of hiding on this one. I teach kindergarten in a public school…the best thing that happened in all my years of teaching was when the orthopedically handicapped class was housed on campus. We had recess with the class and our kids learned about kids with disabilities…and played ball with them and entertained those who could not leave their wheelchair and crawl on the playground. When 2 of the students were mainstreamed into my class full time the kids accpeted them as a equal- one boy told his mom, “he’s just like me but with a wheelchair.” The kids were invited to birthday parties and their own parents were so pleased to have their child “feel” like one of my class. You have to walk the shoes sometimes and not everyone can do that.
Blessings
Redneck Mommy
@SoMo
Well, I always dumbed it down to my kids when they were younger.
I would say their body was born broken or that they had a bad accident and now their body doesn’t work right. I would explain that they used their wheels instead of their legs. Or they were fed thru a tube instead of eating with their mouth.
Even if I didn’t know exactly the nature of the disability it’s pretty honest to just tell them their body wasn’t made the same way your child’s body was. You can relate it to something they understand…like a broken toy of theirs that is missing a piece or snapped or something. Something simple and easy for a child to visualize and relate to. They don’t need an indepth diagnosis or explanation. They are genuinely curious and that is a good thing. Shows interest and intelligence.
A lot of disabled people, and parent’s of disabled kids LOVE it when you bring your kids up to talk to their disabled child. And most parents like myself have no problems offering up an age appropriate explanation.
But we’d much rather make contact with a child and offer up reassurances if it means that maybe that child won’t be so freaked out when they cross another disabled person as they get older. You know?
Chicky Chicky Baby
Once again you have reminded me why I want to be just like you when I grow up. I NEVER could have been so coherent about something that clearly bothered (and rightly so. damn.).
This is why I am your slave for life.
Redneck Mommy
@Gladys
I can assure you I would never snort and turn his wheel chair away. I have *NEVER* done that and I *NEVER* will, regardless of how I feel in my own personal head space. I’m rather horrified to hear that someone has done that.
Shocked and aghast and I feel this overpowering need to apologize on behalf of all parents to handicapped children. Which is irrational of course, but rationality was never my strong suit. Ask my husband or my best friends. Heh.
I would never stop a well meaning conversation between ANYONE and my child. Whether my child was a grown adult or a young child. I believe that all people with handicaps need to be treated just like everyone else. Which includes having conversations with other people.
I can only speak on my own behalf and of a few select parents of handicapped children that I know very well. I know that we (my friends and I) encourage the public to be social with us and our children. Especially children with our children. The very last thing in the world I want anyone to do is pretend my child does not exist.
I am sorry if this has been your experience in the past. But I can guarantee you, if you ever ask my kid how he likes the movie, I’ll all but kiss you with gratitude. I believe most parents with children with handicaps genuinely feel this way. (All though keep in mind, I’m only stating my opinion and am not the poster child for all parents with disabled children.)